Congress is rethinking car safety rules, starting with automatic emergency braking

Skye Jacobs

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Ripple effect: Senate Republicans are preparing to press the auto industry on the cost and effectiveness of federally mandated safety technologies, setting up a January hearing that will test how far lawmakers are willing to revisit long-standing assumptions about vehicle safety rules. At stake are not only the mandates for automatic emergency braking and rear-seat child alerts, but also the broader direction of US regulation as Congress weighs whether to emphasize advanced driver-assistance and autonomous systems over prescriptive hardware requirements.

The Senate Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation has scheduled a Jan. 14 hearing, chaired by Sen. Ted Cruz of Texas, to examine how government mandates and environmental rules are affecting the price of new cars and trucks.

Chief executives from General Motors, Ford, and Stellantis, along with a senior Tesla executive, have been called to testify about why the average transaction price for a new vehicle in the US has climbed to around $50,000.

Cruz has framed the session as a response to voter concerns about affordability, arguing that mandated safety and emissions technologies have pushed vehicles out of reach for many households. Committee Republicans plan to use the hearing to say that the most transformative US safety gains came from earlier generations of regulation, such as mandatory seat belts and structural crashworthiness standards adopted between the 1960s and 1980s, and that incremental benefits from newer sensor-based systems are smaller and more costly to achieve.

They are expected to contend that complex electronics can be unreliable in real-world conditions, expensive to repair after a crash, and susceptible to false positives that erode driver trust.

The hearing will also revisit the political fight over environmental rules, including the rollback of federal and state electric-vehicle mandates and fuel-economy standards that Republicans and automakers said forced companies toward higher-priced EVs and related components. Lawmakers on the committee have signaled they will link those debates directly to safety technology, arguing that a growing number of mandated systems compounds cost pressures.

Automatic emergency braking, or AEB, sits at the center of the technical dispute. NHTSA finalized Federal Motor Vehicle Safety Standard No. 127 earlier this year, requiring that nearly all new passenger cars and light trucks sold in the US be equipped with AEB systems by the 2029 model year, with an extra year for small-volume manufacturers.

The rule sets performance thresholds rather than dictating a single design, but in practice, it assumes a sensor suite that typically includes forward-facing cameras, radar units, and control software integrated into the vehicle's electronic braking system.

Because many new vehicles already ship with some form of forward collision warning or limited AEB, regulators estimate that much of the incremental cost of meeting the new rule will come from software upgrades rather than full hardware redesigns.

The January hearing will also spotlight rear-seat reminder and child-presence detection systems. These systems fall into several technical categories: some rely on software that tracks door opening and ignition cycles and then triggers a visual or audible reminder when the engine is turned off; more advanced versions use pressure sensors in seats, ultrasonic or radar sensors in the cabin, or in-cabin cameras to detect movement or the presence of a child and escalate alerts accordingly.

Automakers have already rolled out these features in hundreds of models, in some cases through voluntary industry commitments designed to stay ahead of potential mandates.

Beyond individual technologies, Senate Republicans plan to use the hearing to argue that policy should focus more on enabling higher levels of automation rather than layering additional prescriptive safety features onto conventional vehicles.

They are expected to contend that resources would be better spent accelerating advanced driver-assistance and autonomous vehicle programs that could address crash risk more holistically, including through vehicle-to-vehicle communication, richer sensor stacks, and more capable perception and planning software.

Safety advocates and some Democrats, by contrast, maintain that baseline equipment rules for features like AEB and rear-seat alerts are compatible with, and may even accelerate, progress toward more automated vehicles by making sophisticated sensors and compute platforms standard across the fleet.

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My old 2018 Jeep Grand Cherokee overland had this feature. I remember someone mentioning that the car decided to brake* when he was changing a lane which can potentially cause a pile up. These things always seem great in theory but in reality has blindspots.
 
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Safety regulations are great, but if taken too far they can become a hindrance. AEB has saved me from a few accidents, but demanding things like it work in all weather and speeds and at night, well, that isnt feasible, aside from the reduced visibility at night making camera based systems less effective and inclimate weather renders sensors inoperable.

There's also the constant nagging. BONG BONG BING BING BING WARNING BING BING SEATBELT BING BING BING is incredibly distracting.

Cost reflects all this. People bemoan the loss of cheap, reliable transportation but then demand all these expensive safety systems be mandated. Something has to give, and that is the price.

If we're allowed to drive motorcycles and three wheelers with no safety, why are we not allowed to buy a small, efficient, cheap car without AEB or side curtain air bags? If all I need is a city grocery getter, why do I need a car that can survive a 200mph impact with a brick wall? In Europe, they sell cars that are not approved for highway use, that dont meet modern safety standards, which are meant for city use only. Why can we not have that here?
 
How are regulations (created by Democrats and Republicans) not "their lane"?
Because people who have little to no knowledge of the subject they're making regulations for end up pushing policies that do not have the intended effect, end up making a product more expensive and gives the individual a worse experience.

I was in a friend's vehicle when he hit a pigeon head on doing about 50 MPH, the automatic breaking kicked in, the wheels lost reaction and we almost went off the road. Thank goodness no one was near us.

The problems with these policies isn't in the situations you can think of(the ones they're built around) it's in the situations you CANT think of
 
I agree with the republicans 100% .

Prices skyrocketed on everything during Bidens term because Biden and co decided to fund a 3rd world invasion of our country and also give hundred's of billions to Ukraine much of it completely unaccounted for . DOGE also uncovered that democrats were funding their woke marxist agenda using taxpayer money in many countries throughtout the world which caused the U.S dollar to become essentially worthless .
 
Need to do something about the headlamps too... I'm sick of being blinded by other vehicles, and a lot of them are new vehicles with factory aimed lights. They are aimed too damn high. Ford Maverick, F150's, Cadillac Escalade, Teslas, some Subaru's, Toyota's, and more unfortunately. Not to mention the arsehats running LED bulbs in their crap headlamps, they don't give a crap. We need annual inspections and techs to properly aim these things. No one wants more government but police aren't enforcing the local headlamp laws, nor do they have time to. The problem is so bad, that if I was an officer assigned only to ticket drivers with incorrectly aimed headlamps I'd go less than 30 seconds after my last stop before finding another one. It's out of control.
 
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Ignoring politics, the reason all this crap is so expensive is that there is zero standardization across the board and everyone is squabbling over gaudy and excessive design through proprietary patents which the consumer pays for. Headlights would be a lot cheaper if there were only 3 legal configurations for them. Remember?

That being said, I love the safety tech in my car and the awareness it provides. I enjoy commanding my vehicle through rush hour traffic and letting it handle the details itself through radar cruise and a vast array of sensors, rather than fixating on the rear of whatever I'm behind. However, the new style of driving means knowing your system's weaknesses and always being prepared to intervene.
 
Well being a jeep and breaking is what they do well. Imagine if they actually brake!
That jeep stalled 5 times randomly and on the highway before the dealership figured out what's wrong with it because the part that was at fault no longer worked. 🤦‍♂️ We decided to go German and now on im on my second q7. The q7 also has this feature when a random biker passes by and the vehicle decides to tighten everyone's seat belts and shows a collision warning even if the biker is on the side of the vehicle. It's so random but happens every time I im in Brooklyn. I'm guessing the collision sensors are probably 360 degrees and are sensitive to false positives.
 
and also give hundred's of billions to Ukraine much of it completely unaccounted for
So unaccounted for it never seems to have happened. Under Bidens term:
According to the US itself it was about $184.8 billion
According to the Kiel institute it was $130.6 billion (including not yet received but allocated)

So in neither case hundreds of billions, and keep in mind that his is with America's very creative bookkeeping. E.g. Cluster Ammunition that was donated is counted as if it would get replaced even though going to disposed off without getting replaced if Ukraine didn't take it. Or for the older models of Abrams the cost is calculated based upon a brand new latest version replacement etc etc.
Only Europe qualifies for 'hundreds of billions' donated/allocated (about $316 billion at the moment - according to the Kiel Institute).

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On topic. I'll tell you what isn't helping with these costs, having different rules for "trucks" and "cars" making "cars" more expensive than the behemoth SUVs that qualify as "trucks" bypassing the regulations of cars.
Now people end up buying massive SUVs that take a lot more materials to produce simply due to their size resulting in higher costs. Strain on the parts hauling all of that around are going to be higher, cost of ownership due to fuel use goes up as well. It's a lose-lose-lose situation that the car industry creatively lobbied in there.

The US is also the only country with a steady increase in road accident deaths in a time frame that seems to strongly correlate with the rise of SUV popularity. Turns out a bigger, heavier car, oh excuse me -truck- is better at killing people. Decent chunk of its from people not being able to see what's directly in front of them (like their own children in the driveway..). Another L.*
2560px-1994-_Motor_vehicle_traffic_deaths_in_road_accidents%2C_by_country.svg.png


So how about leveling the playing field. Have cars on equal footing with 'trucks', doesn't just lower the cost that way but then people can afford smaller vehicles with all the advantages they come with.

*The car industry will of course only show the numbers of SUV drivers/passengers as fatalities to show that they're just as safe or even saver than a regular vehicle. Never mind that it is more lethal for everyone not inside one.
 
Senate Republicans can take a long walk off a short plank. They are not trying to solve any real problems here. They are just implying that safety tech is "woke" and thus is bad. LEt's make America great again by going back to 1950-80's automobile safety standard, when even seat belts barely existed. Cars were death traps in an accident. You want to bring down car prices, end the tariffs!

The rise in cost is not driven by safety tech. Many cars had this tech in the late 2010s. I had a 2018 Honda, a 2019 Hyundai, and a 2020 Kia that all had it standard. That was before car prices went crazy. There are many other reasons for high car prices that have nothing to do with safety.

I personally really like the safety features. Companies like Kia and Honda put them in all of their cars, thus actually bringing the price down by averaging it across all cars. It really does save lives. I have teenage drivers and live in an area that is very populated, especially with aggressive drivers. Advanced safety features are a godsend for my family.

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I am amazed at times how a "tech site" has so many tech haters. This could be an engaging forum discussion about the actual tech and its pros/cons, but instead it is full of haters. It’s just puzzling to me. The arguments on here are so silly at times. It reminds me of when I was young and the local yokels where I lived swore they would never wear a seat belt because they heard that Jim Bob's cousin's friend survived a rollover crash by being ejected through the sunroof due to not wearing a seat belt. Proof that NOT wearing a seat belt is safer. The number of times I heard that in my youth was mind-blowing.
 
I agree with the republicans 100% .

Prices skyrocketed on everything during Bidens term because Biden and co decided to fund a 3rd world invasion of our country and also give hundred's of billions to Ukraine much of it completely unaccounted for . DOGE also uncovered that democrats were funding their woke marxist agenda using taxpayer money in many countries throughtout the world which caused the U.S dollar to become essentially worthless .

You are in a cult bud
 
I agree with the republicans 100% .

Prices skyrocketed on everything during Bidens term because Biden and co decided to fund a 3rd world invasion of our country and also give hundred's of billions to Ukraine much of it completely unaccounted for . DOGE also uncovered that democrats were funding their woke marxist agenda using taxpayer money in many countries throughtout the world which caused the U.S dollar to become essentially worthless .
Also, during your kings mighty leadership the average price of a new car has increased over 2,000 dollars this year. Everything has gone up in price during your kings reign. As I remember I heard..”I will lower prices on day one.” Still waiting…… sounds like a cult
 
Literal dumbasses in Congress. The prices of vehicles (and everything else) has been climbing to new all-time highs because of their record spending and record deficits, and of course, the Fed's record printing of money to satisfy the aforementioned spending. Inflation distorts the pricing of everything, and the coming monetary debasement will destroy everything.
 
Because people who have little to no knowledge of the subject they're making regulations for end up pushing policies that do not have the intended effect, end up making a product more expensive and gives the individual a worse experience.

I was in a friend's vehicle when he hit a pigeon head on doing about 50 MPH, the automatic breaking kicked in, the wheels lost reaction and we almost went off the road. Thank goodness no one was near us.

The problems with these policies isn't in the situations you can think of(the ones they're built around) it's in the situations you CANT think of
Agreed. So aren't they acting "within their lane" by removing regulations?
 
Need to do something about the headlamps too... I'm sick of being blinded by other vehicles, and a lot of them are new vehicles with factory aimed lights. They are aimed too damn high. Ford Maverick, F150's, Cadillac Escalade, Teslas, some Subaru's, Toyota's, and more unfortunately. Not to mention the arsehats running LED bulbs in their crap headlamps, they don't give a crap. We need annual inspections and techs to properly aim these things. No one wants more government but police aren't enforcing the local headlamp laws, nor do they have time to. The problem is so bad, that if I was an officer assigned only to ticket drivers with incorrectly aimed headlamps I'd go less than 30 seconds after my last time before finding another one. It's out of control.
Cashing at speedtraps is easier and faster.
 
90%, of the driving public, including big trucks, will be foaming at the mouth because they cannot tailgate the vehicle in front of them! Which, is the reason for most crashers, following too closely and not being able to stop. Might, end up being a good thing.

 
I agree with the republicans 100% .

Prices skyrocketed on everything during Bidens term because Biden and co decided to fund a 3rd world invasion of our country and also give hundred's of billions to Ukraine much of it completely unaccounted for . DOGE also uncovered that democrats were funding their woke marxist agenda using taxpayer money in many countries throughtout the world which caused the U.S dollar to become essentially worthless .

LOL
 
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